Kari Wærness
University of Bergen
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kari Wærness.
Community, Work & Family | 2009
Knud Knudsen; Kari Wærness
Over the last generation the male breadwinner/housewife family has gradually become outdated as the dominant normative model for family households. The new ideal has become the adult worker family model, where gender equality defined as economic independence and sharing of household work and childcare between spouses/partners is the norm. The Nordic countries are the frontrunners of this development, and the Nordic welfare model is assumed to be well adapted to this new ideal. However, this ideal does not hold clear norms of how money should be managed and shared in family households, and Nordic families have to establish their own systems. Norwegian survey data from the International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) in 1994 and 2002 are used to analyse patterns of money management in family households. Our study indicates that, even if sharing of economic resources and responsibility remains the most common pattern, a greater number of families are choosing separate and independent systems of financial allocation. This increase in divided systems of money management may lead to new gender inequalities because of the lack of recognition of the value of domestic labour and family care as part of the common provision.
Chapters | 2009
Kari Wærness
The Handbook of Economics and Ethics portrays an understanding of economic methodology in which facts and values, though distinct, are closely interconnected in a variety of ways. From theory building to data collection, and from modelling to policy evaluation, this encyclopaedic Handbook is at the intersection of economics and ethics.
Acta Sociologica | 1995
Kari Wærness
a smaller group of nannies, cleaners and employers. Middle-class households are the major source of new demand for paid domestic help, and the survey enables the authors to discuss the general incidence of waged domestic labour within this particular household form. Through the interview study the nature of the two most usual forms of waged domestic labour, the nanny and the cleaner, was more closely examined.
Economic & Industrial Democracy | 1984
Kari Wærness
European Sociological Review | 2007
Knud Knudsen; Kari Wærness
Acta Sociologica | 2001
Knud Knudsen; Kari Wærness
Journal of Nursing Scholarship | 1988
Ulla Lundh; Mårten Söder; Kari Wærness
Research Review of the Institute of African Studies | 2001
Kari Wærness
Archive | 2006
Kari Wærness
TemaNord; (2005) | 2005
Rosmari Eliasson-Lappalainen; Kari Wærness; Silva Tedre